General Cybersecurity Conference

March 21 – 22, 2018| London, United Kingdom

Cybersecurity Conference Description

Legal Cyber Security Expo is dedicated to helping law firms, independent solicitors and Global organisations defend themselves against the increasing threat of cyber attacks. This exhibition will run alongside Legalex; a legal event specifically designed to help the businesses evolve and expand. Over two days, this exhibition also aims to house the latest systems and services that could help law firms, teams and organisations minimise the risk of a potentially devastating cyber hack.

The legal profession as a whole is still playing catch up with other industries when it comes to cyber security, according to an expert from an international law firm. Speaking to Lawyers Weekly on his recent trip to Australia, K&L …
View full post on National Cyber Security Ventures

This week, the Obama administration announced sanctions against Russia after saying it was confident the Russian government interfered in last year’s presidential election. The president expanded an executive order from 2015 adding new powers to retaliate against those who disrupt

Chinese hackers tried to steal information from a US aircraft carrier patrolling in the South China Sea when the country was under pressure to withdraw its claim over the waters.
USS Ronald Reagan, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, was on patrol

Health experts feared that legalizing marijuana would make it easier for teens to acquire the drug. But a new study has found that teens in Washington State do not find it any easier to get marijuana today than they did in 2012, when the state made it legal for adults age 21 and older to possess small amounts of the drug. However, as pot’s availability has remained steady, teens report that availability of most other drugs has dropped.

Third-party web tracking is still legal, a new ruling has found. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has dismissed a petitionby Consumer Watchdog that would forbid Internet companies from tracking consumers. According to the FCC, the petition was inconsistent with its rules on Internet bias. The petition was part of an ongoing movement to protect consumers who don’t want to be tracked by third-party web trackers, and aimed to provide consumers with a “Do Not Track” setting in theirWEB BROWSERS. Some companies are already committed to honoring “Do Not Track” requests sent in by consumers. But others, like Google, Facebook, YouTube, Pandora, Netflix, and LinkedIn rely on third-party tracking to store data on consumers for data analytics, advertising networks and social networking platforms. For example, you click on a cat video, and soon yourFACEBOOK PAGE will be advertising cat products to you. How does third-party tracking work? It all begins with an innocent “cookie,” a small bit of data loaded onto aWEB BROWSER. Every time a user opens a new web page, a cookie is sent back to the browser to monitor any previous activity. For the most part, cookies are safe: they can’t contain viruses and help store data. But, […]

For more information go to http://www.NationalCyberSecurity.com, http://www. GregoryDEvans.com, http://www.LocatePC.net or http://AmIHackerProof.com